The business of Mobility as a Service: A project update
An update on our project, ‘MaaS business models: Lessons for operators and regulators’, along with a downloadable report.
An update on our project, ‘MaaS business models: Lessons for operators and regulators’, along with a downloadable report.
Professor David Hensher of Sydney University’s ITLS speculates on the role MaaS may have post-COVID-19, proposing two possible scenarios.
Yale Wong, Honorary Associate at the Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies, ponders the effects of COVID-19 on transport.
Watch the video of our Mobility as a Service: Progress and insights from an Australian trial webinar, featuring Professor David Hensher and Sam Lorimer.
iMOVE’s Sydney MaaS trial has been running for some months, and today an interim report on the project has been released.
Professor David Hensher, Director of the Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies has given us his thoughts on how he sees COVID-19 affecting transport.
A feasibility study looking at the possibility of diverting some freight tasks from the road network to utilising spare capacity on public transport.
A primer on the 30-minute city, & small local decisions that are often overlooked in the building of major transport infrastructure policies & programs.
This project looks to consider current parking challenges, & work towards a solution that enables the wider availability & usability of car-share services.
This project investigates the standardisation of safety assurances that autonomous vehicles must satisfy, and how to verify these requirements.
A 6-month trial of MaaS in Sydney, with participants using an app to pay for and arrange their everyday travel needs.
Yale Wong, of the ITLS at the University of Sydney, talks with iMOVE about his transport background, thoughts on MaaS, and more.
Professor John Nelson, from the Institute of Transport and Logistics Studies, talks to iMOVE about where he thinks smart mobility can take public transport.
Research work that underpins one of iMOVE’s projects has been awarded the Australasian Transport Research Forum’s prestigious John H. Taplin Prize.
An interview with David Hensher. He was going to be a macroeconomist, but instead has made moves in the transport and mobility sector since the 1970s.
Development of a general framework for cooperative data fusion, integrating data coming from vehicles and infrastructure.